9 Portland Observer Mariana Islands spark protest by Roger Gale A» the U.S. ruts bark its military commitments on foreign soil, the annexa tion of the fourteen Northern Mariana Islands will give it a new home ba te for expanding m ilita ry in s talla tio n s and booming Ameriran investment in the Parific Basin. Thia first legal srquisition sinre 1898 splits the UN mandated Trust Territory of Mirronesia, sparking strong rritirism from the UN Trusteeship Committee and representative of the other two Mirrone sian island chains. Critics say the seression of the Northern Marianas to berome a U.S. commonwealth will rut off the rirhest par* of Mirronesia and violate the UN guaranteed right of self deter mination for the whole territory. (Mirronesia, three island chains, was taken over from Japan by the U.S. after World W ar II and has been administered as a U N mandate. The mandate expires in 1981, when the territory is supposed to berome independent. Of the original ten trust territories rreated after World W ar II, onlj’ Mirronesia and Namibia (South west A frira) remain under foreign ron trol.l The seression was approved by 78 perrent of the Northern Marianas' 5,300 registered voters in a U.S. sponsored plebiscite last June. Under the agreement, the people of the Northern Marianas will become U.S. citizens and will be self governing except in .natters of military and foreign poliry. U.S IN T E R E S T U.S. interest in the area has always been military. Guam, the southern most Mariana island and a U.S. colony sinre 1898, showed its strategic potential dur ing the Vietnam war. when B 52 bombers based there made daily raids over Indo china. Army Lieutenant General James llol lingsworth, until recently commander of U.S. forces in Korea, told I’ NS (Pacific News Service) in an interview that B 52s from Guam would participate in any new Korean war. The Mananas are closer to the North Korean capital of Pyongyan than to Hanoi, and they are within easy flying range of the USSR's Pacific mill tary headquarters in Vladivoslock. Vital as Guam has been to recent U.S. military strategy in the Parific, the island is only thirty miles long. And according to former Secretary of the U.S. A ir Force John McLucas, has "limited spare and facilities." The Pentagon now wants to build a $300 million naval and air base on the island of Tinian, 100 miles north of Guam and one of the Northern Marianas. The Tinian base would compliment the mas sive fseilMee already on Guam reducing the need to secure approval for military operations from foreign nations hosting U.S. bases. The annexation agreement includes a 50 year renewable lease by the Pentagon on 19,182 acres of land on Tinian. W ith U.S. direct investment in East Asia rapidly increasing to $12 billion in 1975 the Marianas offer an attractive home base for Ameriran firms doing business in the region. As a U.S. commonwealth, the islands would pro vide U.S. military protection, stable political surroundings, inclusion in the dollar zone and a familiar social environ ment. And the Marianas equidistant from Tokyo, Hong Kong and Manila are at the renter of a communications network extending over the whole Pacific. W ith Americans and Japanese seeking island paradises, a growing tourist in dustry invites U.S. investment. A new international airport has just opened on the Mariana island of Saipan, and Pan Ameriran and Continental airlines have recently opened hotels there, hoping to attract some of the 240,000 tourists who visited Guam last year. D IV IS IO N OF M IC R O N E S IA But U.S. interests don't necessarily match those of the 115,000 inhabitants of all three island chains of Mirronesia. In 1969, the Congress of Micronesia, the legislative body for the whole Trust Territory, rejected an offer of common wealth status similar to the one now being implemented. The Congress in sisted on independence or significant autonomy. The rejection came at the end of five years of intensive U.S. economic and educational development -• including a Peace Corps blitz of the islands under a plan outlined by a Kennedy appointed commission. The commission, headed by Harvard Business School professor An thony Solomon, had projected approval of commonwealth status as the culmination of the development drive. A new effort to secure a legal U.S. status in Mirronesia began in 1972 this time through negotiations with a newly formed team of representatives from the Northern Marianas alone. In the pre vious negotiations only the Northern Marians, whose economy has been do minated by U.S military installations since World W ar II, had supported closer ties with the U.S Headed by Edward Pangelinan, an attorney representing slot machine in­ terests and a speculator in Tinian land, the new negotiating team agreed on a proposal for a Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas separate from the rest of Micronesia. Four fifths of the electorate voted in favor of annexation last June. But critics charge the wording of the ballot was biased. U N Charter provisions for such plebiscites stipulate that voters must be offered the choice of independence. But the ballot allowed only approval or disapproval of the commonwealth plan, with no alternatives suggested. Already the most developed of the 2,100 Micronesian islands, the Marianas were promised significant economic be nefits from annexation. These included seven years of development aid and land rent totalling almost $154 million, as well as eligibility for federally funded welfare and employment programs and food stamps. The rash payments alone average over $10,000 per person and are expected to provide improved roads, schools and health facilities as well as jobs. Meanwhile, as the U.S. Congress was voting to acquire the Northern Marianas, delegates from the Caroline and Marshall Islands the rest of Micronesia met in a U.S. funded constitutional convention last summer and fall to draft a constitu tion for a federated Micronesian nation. Despite the cultural differences and distances separating the islands, ronven tion chairman Tosiwo Nakayama was confident the constitution would work. The very fact that the convention had Peggy Joseph For all areas of LUe Insurance Family Financial Planning Health Inaurance and Group Insurance 282 3880 3933 N .E . Union DR. JEFFREY BRADY Soys: "Do Not Pot Off Noodod Dental Coro” Enjoy Dental Health Now and Improve Your Appearance Come In A t Your Convenience Open Saturday Morning • No Appointment Needed • Complete Cooperation On All Dental Insurance Plans • Complete Dental Services Union or Company Dental Insurance Coverage Accepted On Your Needed Dentistry Park Free Any Park 'n Shop Ix>t HOURS: Weekdays 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sat., 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. DR. JEFFREY BRADY, DENTIST SEMLER BUILDING S.W. 3rd & Morrison St. Portland, Oregon Take Elevator to 2nd Floor 3rd St. Entrance Phone: 228-7545 accomplished its task "shows that Micro­ nesia has a way of solving its problems," he said. Even without the economically more advanced Northern Marianas, the pro posed state of Mirronesia has a valuable resource in its oceans. Foreign vessels now take an estimated $75 million werht of fish in Micronesian waters, and under the proposed UN law of the sea, the islands could collect $10 million annually in fees. But the new state will be fragile - and some feel it will be vulnerable to a t­ tempts to incorporate it into the Ma rianas commonwealth. In a complaint to the U N late in November, the In te r­ national league for the Rights of Man charged that the separate vote had violated the right of the people of Micronesia to determine their own fu ture. According to league counsel Jose Gabranes, separation of the Northern Marianas would make it "difficult if not impossible for the other island groups to survive as a unit.” And in a report prepared for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, James F. McHenry described the separate agreement with the Mananas as "contrary to international law and inter national practice." Page 3 Thursday, April 29, 197«, School seeks advisory committee membors Deadline for filing petitions for one of nine adult vacancies on the three Area Citizens Advisory Committees of the Portland Public Schools has been ex tended until May 14th by the Board of Education. In te re s te d citizens w ill now have another week to turn in petitions which must have the signatures of 25 regia tered voters. The earlier deadline was May 7th. Applicants do not need to have children in school. A total of nine vacancies are open, three on each of the committees. Applicants must live in the I V > \ l < .4 »VW K Y 1V /A 1N U area for which they apply, or have a student attending school in that area; and must be eighteen years or older. committees and are appointed for one year terms. School officials say the deadline was extended to make sure as many persons as possible be given opportunity to apply. Petitions are available from the dis­ trict Public Information Office or each of the three area offices and local schools. Interested persons should call the information office. 234 3392; Area 1 office. 244 7541; Area 2 office. 256-7210; Area 3 office, 233-2487 for petitions and they will be mailed, or individuals may pick them up at any one of these places. Applicants are screened by a Review Panel of five citizens appointed by the Board. Appointments are made by the Hoard of Education and are expected to be announced by mid June. Each com­ mittee has nine members, seven adults and two students. Students are ap­ pointed directly by the Board after nomination by the student body gov­ ernments in each of the high schools in the city. Two students serve on the CATALOG OVERSTOCK W ards B a rgain C en ters A FT E R EA STER SA LE 20% - 64% o ff HALF PRICE Philadelphia to hire women The Department of Justice obtained an agreement to a consent decree requiring the Philadelphia Police Department to hire 100 women as police officers within nine months. Attorney General Edward H. Levi said the proposed decree was filed in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia. Pennsyl­ vania. partially resolving an employment discrimination suit filed by the Justice Department. The court took the proposal under advisement. The suit, which was filed on February 19, 1974, charged that city officials discriminated against women in police jobs and that less than one percent of Philadelphia's 7,300 police officers were women. The proposed order requires police officials to fill 100 to 471 existing vacan cies with qualified women within nine months. The proposed order specifies that each of the next five police academy classes shall include at least twenty women selected from the eligibility list resulting from the May 31, 1975, examination. In addition, the 74 women who now work as juvenile aid officers will be given the opportunity to transfer to police officer and to carry over seniority rights and to have immediate promotional op­ portunities. Under the proposed order, the city will abolish the separate job titles of police mand and policewoman and establish the entry level position of police officer. During the next two years, the city will study the performance of the 100 new women police officers and submit a report to the court for possible modification of the consent decree. The city is also required to file with the court job statistics every six months and for each training class of the police academy. The proposed decree defers resolution of the issues of back pay and the city's hiring and promotional policies until the two year study is submitted to the court. The agreement was negotiated during a recess in the trial of the suit. Summer school begins June 21 Portland school district's regular sum mer school session will begin June 21st, Edwin Schneider, assistant superinten dent for instructional support programs, announced. Summer high school sessions are sche­ duled to be held at Lincoln High School again this year. Benson High School will also offer career education courses re­ lated to facilities at the schools. High school summer classes are scheduled to run six weeks to July 30th. Elementary summer school is sche duled to begin on June 21st, and will run four weeks to July 16th. Summer programs will be offered at Wilson. Grant and Franklin high schools. Additional elementary summer school programs will be held in some of the Title I schools in the district, Rasmussen said. Informa tion about the Title I program is available from the area offices of the school district. The district will alfco offer driver education classes as part of the summer school program. Wilson. Franklin, and Adams high schools will serve as opera tion centers for the program. The program will be divided into two sessions beginning July fith to July 21st and again from July 22n4 to August 6th. Tuition for thk summer school program is $30 for the high h^hool session and $15 for the elementary summer school pro­ gram. The driver education fee is $7.50. Tuition for out of district students is double the regular fee. Registration information is available in the local elementary and high schools. MENS’ ASSORTED SWEATER GROUP 97 REG. 7.99 Knit sweaters in classic styles to wear indoors or out. Easy care; just machine wash, tumble dry. All in 5 fashion colors, and soft as cashmere. Sizes S, M, L and XL. Stock up now on these all-weather knits! 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